Originally posted by Ken524
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It's time to go Vertical
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Re: It's time to go Vertical
That's what I'm thinking. I won't worry about the shape of it till then. By the way, my neighbor has a sand blaster ( he's into restoring cars) and I remember someone etching the keystone. It may have been Jim, but I don't remember who, does anyone?
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Re: It's time to go Vertical
You mean the sore back is not punishment enough. I had to shopping today, got 30 more bricks which I hope closes the dome and finishes the archway. I really haven't thought about the chimney yet. I figure I can get to curing the WFO and cooking without one for a short term.Originally posted by Acoma View PostHA! You ran out of bricks
Now you need to wait 30 days as punishment. I will go at my normal pace and we will happily finish together 
The only problem with shopping is we've started another project. I got 500 sf of wood flooring for the room above our garage. Priorities, which will I work on first
Hopefully we will get some rain and I can do the flooring, otherwise that will wait for the FIRES.
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Re: It's time to go Vertical
That was exactly my experience. Looks nearly identical in shape and size to my 10th. 3 more rows to go and you get to figure out how you will do the keystone!Originally posted by RCLake View PostSo I went back to brick by brick and eyeballing it. Can't help myself. Made a little progress on the oblong as you can see in the last picture. (
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Re: It's time to go Vertical
HA! You ran out of bricks
Now you need to wait 30 days as punishment. I will go at my normal pace and we will happily finish together
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Re: It's time to go Vertical
Finished row 10 yesterday, it feels like I'm working upside down. I started using Jim's guide and precut a handful of bricks, worked good initially but then I needed to make adjustments. So I went back to brick by brick and eyeballing it. Can't help myself. Made a little progress on the oblong as you can see in the last picture. The top circle is 14" with the arch area about 15", so I don't think it is to bad. Ran out of bricks though.
3 Photos
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Re: It's time to go Vertical
Back in my building days, that's how I think I would've handled it, but again, that's why I decided not to try.
RObert, you'll have a great result, even if its a couple of millimeters off here or there.
RC - you done yet???
Sorry to get off topic.
G.
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Re: It's time to go Vertical
George, I may do that. What I will do during the next course is to focus on it last so that I can see the others shaping up properly. This will give me a guide as to how much (adjustment brick) will be needed, thinned, fitted to make it work. You know me, get to it right so that it will be behind me.
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Re: It's time to go Vertical
Robert,
How about laying in thin bricks, just in the area where the dome's circle is out of round, in order to bet you back to a more perfect shape?
The arch transition and the resulting shape of the subsequent brick courses that I'd seen on many ovens is the reason I chose to go with the angle iron over the dome entrance. It looked easier and I wasn't confident that I could make all those obscure cuts that Ken and Les were doing. (I was correct about that part).
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Re: It's time to go Vertical
I hear you on that oblong shape. I saw it happening when I was completing my transition with 7. I added some mortar on the low area, and will use slightly additional mortar in that area to get my dome more round.
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Re: It's time to go Vertical
yeah.. I had the same problem. I didn't address it early enough and it ended up getting worse as I went along. ( I thought it would correct itself ...Originally posted by RCLake View PostTried fixing the oblong part by the arch and that took some extra mortar, but I think it's getting better.
) My keystone was one weird shape, nothing like some of the beautiful ones around here. But so far, my dome is still standing!
Keep up the good work!
Dave
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Re: It's time to go Vertical
Sounds very close to me too. As you close in at the top, you get more worried about just making the bricks stick, and less worried about the angle. After all those rows you've already completed, you get pretty comfortable with the size of the space needed between each row and just kind of eyeball it (at least I did).
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Re: It's time to go Vertical
I took the tarp off and decided to try my new tool. The slope after 9 rows is 65 degrees. Jim's chart row 10 has a 62 slope and a 8.5 bevel. If his chart's slope is before (i.e. after row 9) I'm close. If not so what!
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Re: It's time to go Vertical
Robert, Row 8 took 23 half bricks and row 9 used 19.Originally posted by Acoma View PostRC, how many bricks to complete 9? I would suggest finishing th e mortaring inside, cleaning up, then going to 10. Looks like all is going at a nice pace for you.
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Re: It's time to go Vertical
stop torturing meOriginally posted by gjbingham View PostRC,
Just wait until you get mortar all over the angle finder and you can't see the angle at all. You try to wipe it off, but it just smears, and you still can't see the angle. Then your back starts screaming...... Geeze, I miss that!
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